Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
NATIONAL UNIVERSITY ber 27, 1930 | FICHOOL OF LAW-—SCHOOL OF ECONOMICS AND GOVERNMENT | meststrar's omes opem for reistraticn . 818 13th St. NW. Telephones Nat, 6617, Met. 7964 CIVIL SERVICE The Olvit Sevice Freparatory Seheal T50h and "W, BE. ‘Cor, 2o anuiin oo™ 3 lest possible time @i exvlenla,; 'xd'r" the "Tollowing, examin Devitt School \n accredited bairding and day fibnl in Washington, D. ‘G, which stresses College Entrance l ner vear.” | i° 2961 Upton Street N.W. Washington, D. C. Memple School Inc. kmflu Indlmdual Instruction in Business and Gnrml Training + Enroll for Fall Classes 1420 K St. NA. 3258 Enrollment Week Special instruction for Fall Civil Serv- jce examinations. Begin this week. SPECIAL mns for ENROLLMENT WEEK. Prepare for Clerk Promotion, Statistical Clerk -M File Clerk exami- nations. Classes 5 days and 5 nights each 3 SE. Cor. 12th & F N.W, 6337 * 1747 Rhode Island Ave. North 1114 Begins October ‘1st D'-, nfinfiq Lowest Rates COLUMBIA Pos Office Blds, 1tk & Pack Bd. GEORGETOWN LAW SCHOOL 1930-1931 SESSIONS COMMENCE For Morning Classes DerTsst L B LL M. J. B HUOH 3 FEGAN. 3. AL LL B PR D, Assistant’ Dean Georgetown Law School 506 E Street, N.W. Telephone National 7293 lYlE MAY TESTIFY N OWN DEFENSE Ex-Prohibition Chief, in Brib- ery Case, to Follow Co- Defendant on Stand. By the Associated Press. SEATTLE, Wash, September 10.— Counsel for Roy C. Lyle, former pro- hibition administrater, on trial charged with bribery and conspiracy, planned to plu‘h:lllm on the stand today in his own The cross-examination of William M. Whitney, Lyle’s former assistant, charged jointly with him and two formed dry agents, was completed yes- terday. ‘Whitney's testimony consisted of & blanket denial of the Government charges that the ' former prohibition || chiefs accepted bribes from rum run- ners in a conspiracy to violate the tariff and gmhlbmon laws. fendants with Lyle and Whitney are Earl Cor- win and R. L. Fryant, former agents. Before Whitney left the stand yester- day he testified Seattle police officers had frquently prevented seizure of liruor cargoes on the Seattle water- front. “We'd go down to the waterfront on tips that loads were coming in,” Whit- ney testified, “and police cars would come around and the officers would talk to us, then circle around.” WASHINGTON College of Music Twenty-Seventh year. An institution for children = ini sractice rehest; $10706 8 St NoW. Interior Decoration Costume Design Life Class Children’s Saturday Class A 1333 F St. N.W. THE SWAVELY SCHOOL Nationally Known Preparatory School for Boys 28 Miles From Washington 3]st Year Opens Sept. 15 Study and recreation adapted to individusl Thorough Emgfr"fiu'i"i‘;n.fi'."v‘:‘ 74tn Contecutive Year "3&[70 P SL Nonl;flllflils: e.-x’d' e b i g in 8, nd_Porsien Countries . mmmflum.n—x- Arl!'. also al m: e-n-u, Cfinl Mlelll “A. Collegiate Institution for Buasiness Training” R Twenty - seventh successful vear. Enlarged faculty. Im- proved courses. Classes now formirg. Dey and Evening Sessions Registrations Now Being Made For Catalogue, Call or Phone National 1748 721 Thirteenth Street PILIILIIIIII I, R T TR dewrsrs Graduates WAN TED Employment Service Our Employment Depart. ment is nationally known. It receives hundreds of calls for Lewis Trained men and women. Below are few of the graduates cently placed in lucra positions Lucille Hayum, Hostess Brookdale Lodge; Anna 8. Lowitz, Manager, Unity Club; Hubert L. Goodrich, Room Clerk, Ho- tel Racine; Mary Wilson, Housekeeper, Ft. William Henry; Arthur Moore, Stew- ard, Highland Manor School; James Darroh, Room Clerk, City Point Inn; Sue Keller, Manager, White Hall Ho- tel; Gerald Kendall, Assis- tant Manager, Wiscasset Inn; Mrs. L. A. Garfield, Hostess, Hotel Elinore; and many others. Lsm‘s HoTEL 23rd at I’Illlilnlh Avo. (Washington Clrele). Sty For good Positions in Hotels, Restaurants, Tea Rooms and Clubs EWIS HOTEL TRAIN- ING SCHOOLS are being called upon constantly for more trained men and women to fill important positions at $1,500 to $5,000 a year in Hotels. Restaurants, Clubs, Tea Rooms, Cafeterias, etc. You can qualify either for a good executive position or to go into business for yourself. September Night Class Now Forming Our night class in Hotel Training and Food Management begins September 17. The class is filling rapidly. Instruction is personal- ized. Last year we turned away applicants, because numbers are definitely limited. So act at once if you are interested. Visit us up to 9:00 P. M. Ask for Mr. Dou- that. Or write for booklet, “Your Real Opportunity.” TRAINING ScHoOLS Phone~—West 2192 L‘HIU]REN Fl[l[‘.K TO FAIRFAX FAR Free Admission and Last Day of School Vacation Mag- nets That Draw. Spe¢ial Dispatch to The Star. FAIRFAX, Va., September 10.—A large attendance of children, accom- panied by their parents, marked the opening of the Fairfax County fair today. County schools open to- morrow and puplls took advantage of their last day of freedom, combined with free admission for all children under 15, to throng the fair grounds and midway attractions. Judging Begins. Judging of the exhibits began this afternoon, superintendents being busy this morning in arranging last minute entries. 1In spite of the dry ‘weather, exhibits of fruits, garden pfl:duce. canned goods and farm orops are pro- nounced better than last year. It is as though every one had decided to make an effort to put their best foot forward. The cattle entries are pro- nounced unusually fine. Three centers of attraction on the grounds were the large booths operated by the Fairfax County Chamber of Commerce and the County Health De- partment and the model camp set up by the Boy Scout troops. Tomorrow will be designated as Chamber of Commerce day, with a pro- gram of athletics beginning at 1 o'clock under the leadership of Mrs. G. Ashley Money and William J. Cleveland. There will be 50-yard dashes for boys and for girls under 12, 75-yard dashes for both boys and girls from 12 to 16, 75-yard dashes for girls over 16, three-legged races, married ladies’ race, old man’s race, rolling pin throwing contest. At 2:30 a beauty contest will be staged. Better Baby Contest. At 3 o'clock tomorrow the County Health Department will hold a better baby contest. Mrs. Herbert Seamons, county nurse, emphasizes that this will not be a pretty baby contest, but that all awards will be based on health and weight. Judges will be doctors from Alexandria and Washington. The fair will stage five horse races Thursday afterncon at half-hour in- tervals beginning at 2 o'clock. Jim Head, superintendent of racing, will be assisted by Holley Barnes and J. L. Hil~ leary, with Clifton Laughlin of McLean and William Earle of Fairfax as judges. ‘There will be a one-half-mile dash, one-half-mile half-bred, pony race, one- mile flat and mule race. In the Home Demonstration Building the Floris Women's Club will demon- strate school lunches and the Burke Club meal planning. Herndon 4-H Club girls will give a demonstration in the morning on whole wheat muffins, BOYS HELD IN JOY-RIDING Three youths arrested in Lexington, N. C, while riding in a machine stolen recenuy from Mrs, Gwendolyn c;mu of the Aribassador Hotel, were bri bu:k by "héadquarters dem:tlve- lut night and charged with joy-riding, They gave their names as les Powell, 22 years old; his brother, James F. Powell, 18, and P. M. Carpenter, 21, all of 1030 Seventeenth street. T. S. Imports Muskox. OSLO, Norway, September 10 (#)— €/ ghe liner Bergenstjord has departed dor New York with 34 muskox, which the erican Government intends to send The lwck was imported to East_Greenland with ¢ Brotessss li'("r'n’:“m der. Ko a, gc "{"sfir ‘Music, Beriin-Oh 'l'ln Clng. 'S.h:‘n“lpurt-nt Benjamin Franklin University 314 _TRANSPORTATION BLDG. 8259 17th Sidwell’s Friends School For Boys and Girls Kindergarten an Country Club, Bus S¢ Thos. W. Sidwell, A. M. Principal Phone National 0284 SAVE AMERICA FOR WEEK ENDS ..EUROPE for your fall Vacation! Many Travel Bargains on United States Liners ® Widen the horizen of your hoppiness . . . Don't waste your golden youth revisiting old places and old faces . . . Teke a magnificent United States Liner to Europe . . . and do things!- For flestness and elegance on the grand scale . . . smart, chic people days and nights of luxury. .. Visit your agent, or one of our offices . . . see what travel bargains are available. SAILINGS LEVIATHAN SEPT. 27 OCT.18 NOV.8 DEC.6& NEW YORK CHERBOURG SOUTHAMPTON FIRST CLASS FARE $272.90 THE PAMOUS CABIN FIVE NEW YORK TO PLYMOUTH CHERBOURG ~ HAMB LUXURY AT LOW ci FROM $132.80 REPUBLIC nov. 7 rn ocT.8 NOV.19 ' DEC.¥P ToumsT THIND cABIN A8 Lo AS $108.00 NEW YORK TO LONDON. .. 8100 AMERICAN MERCHANT LINERS SAIL EVERY THURSDAY For full information, deckplans, fares, ete., see your nearest Steamship Agent or UNITED STATES LINES Childress. m.am. b BLANCO AT GIBRAL omn.'n& w 10 P~ ique Blanco, from the depart. ment ox sp-nhb at Yowa University, arrived here yesterday from Boston, via the Azores, traveling in the 10-ton yacht Evalu. He was accompanied by his wife and 7-year-old daughter. professor will soon leave for Me- lilla, Morocco, where the srlnlah au- thorities are preparing festivities for his Teception. Exeter, England, will scrap its mu- glclpfl street cars and substitute motor $55,300 DAMAGE SUIT NOW UP FOR REHEARING Oonh-. Police . Captain Is Charged With Placing Woman Under Plyeh.o- pathi¢ Observation Unlawfully. By the Assoclited Press. LOS ANGELES, September 10.—Re- trial of a sult for $55300 damages brought by Mrs. Christine Collins against Police Capt. J. J. Jones because he had her incarcerated for psycho- pathig observation when she refused to mnmummm m‘&mfl!:,of'dm Northeott is mut‘;e X:nlu n:;mmu. ’leuled urder of young Coilins serving s life sentence. e after Mrs. Collins report- % Jones ap- a boy who said he was . Collins took the it later rawmed. ying hé was not llins assérted Capt. ot her re- ity as a mother and of being 'was not Walter Collins and said his real name was Arthur Hutchins of Illi- nois. Young Hutchins said he had per- petrated the hoax in order to get o California. He wu returned ‘to the | Middle Western Stat Inmeflntmno!mx Collins’ suit the jury disagreed. e 1 The little girls belonging to schoels | in Tokio, Jaj hold anpually an ex- | traordinary festival. A small table is used as an altar and to this the girls solemnly sweets and as an | offering to the souls of the needles they have been careless enough to lose during the year. ‘The boy later admitted he |- “ o Enamel YEffects” auto finish h by 12 far the colors. MEtro. 0151 BUTLER-FLYNN 607-609 C St, Phone for Color Card Free Parking Space for Customers, E Street Between 6th & 7th THE F‘ Street at- 7th HECHT CO. NAtional 5100 Romantic 1930 Fashions New Sheer Wool Frocks | Low placed pleats give fuliness to tnis frock of wool oeorgette. $16. Be Highbrow in wearing the New Made to sell for much more Youthful brims, pancake of soft felts, vel . and green. | | Il | I | | | | berets, wider brims, Deftly fashioned ribbon. Shawn in black, brown (Third Floor, The Hecht Oo.) Wool Lace : - Faconne Wool So different from the old idea of a woolen frock! Mobile, graceful hanging, as light-weight as soft silk. Perfect for the new softly tailored modes. Some with jackets and silk blouses, others with a leather belt or flower by way of contrast. In the new warm Fall colors and color com- binations. For Little Women 161% to 2214 (Third Floor, 'For Misses 14 to 20 tons down e front; and simulated eton &4 { on new merita Wool lace tn m aa_ Drown with au nflw 2 ek and fowe: $186. 50 This skirt Thias &% 5% tine. ... The Health Shoe for Built for the intelligent and scien- tific care of little feét. Made on na- ture’s last, with room for every toe, flexible leather soles that move with the feet, no nails or tacks, shoes that fit and hold the arch and heel. Smart- ly made of durable leathers, made to withstand the wear and tear of school days and play. White, smoked, congo and brown elk leathers, calf and patent leather. Hats Priced according to siz $2.75 PI‘. In Sizes 2to 5 h Sizes $3.25 515 to 8 pr. In Sizes $3°75 81 to 1l pre In Sizes $425 1114 to 13 pr. (Becond Ploor, The Meeht Co.) cushion types and vet and velvet The Hecht Co.) Thank You, Washington! Despite one less business day in August — we did the largest August volume in our history. Fall for Novelty Knit W3l Wool Crepe 16 | For Women 38 to 42 Black woal tace_ wenrs qua Tow siaced Tupte. Black _merita cloth in 'a” three piece suit, capu- cine crepe dlouse. SIMPLEX FLEXIES Growmg Feet'